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Artichoke & Lemon Cheese Spread

12.12.2012 by J. Doe // Leave a Comment

I learned something important from this recipe: No matter how simple something seems, you can screw it up royally if you’re tired.

I’ve not been sleeping well for, well, a year now, so evenings are especially challenging. Typically during the holiday season, I’d be cooking well into the evening, candying and caramelizing and so on.

This year it’s all I can do to feed the dog. I will say things improved – rather quickly, you will not be surprised to hear – when I got news that my divorce was finalized.

It’s a good thing, too, because it’s quite possible I would have killed someone – or at least their taste buds – the way things were going. I ran across this recipe on the website of a local cooking school, and thought, that sounds easy and as luck would have it, I have all the ingredients on hand. It was 9:30 pm, well past my current bedtime.

Here’s a handy tip: When a recipe says add one teaspoon of lemon juice, that is not – and I mean not –  the same thing as juice of one lemon. It may look the same to sleep-deprived eyes, but your taste buds will point out your error, post-haste.

I suppose this is a mistake that is fixable, if you had enough cream cheese, artichoke hearts, and other seasonings available, and I tried valiantly. I added an extra half package of cream cheese, which cut the lemon somewhat, but not enough to really render the final spread, you know, delicious.

It was late and since I was pretty sure any additional  efforts would result in additional mistakes, I gave up. I had a potluck brunch the next day and no time to make anything else, and so, yes, I brought it.

It will make everyone else feel better about what they brought, I reasoned.

I employed several taste testers, including The Child, who tried not to hurt my feelings when she pronounced the first sample “too lemony” and the second sample “better, but …”. A couple of friends at the potluck tried it and said it wasn’t really as bad as all that, just “a bit lemony.”

One of them, though, made this suggestion: the original recipe called for thyme, but she thought it would be better with some dill. The next time I made it – in the morning, just after my coffee, thankyouverymuch – I swapped out the thyme for some dill, and the end result was perfectly delicious: Light, creamy, and not overpoweringly lemony. The garlic adds a nice – but not overwhelming – bite.

It really isn’t a hard recipe, if you’re awake. The original can be found in Carol Dearth’s Cooking Class: A Step by Step Guide to Stress Free Dinner Parties That Are Simply Elegant. Carol Dearth is one of the chefs at the Seattle-area Sizzleworks Cooking School.

Artichoke & Lemon Cheese Spread
 
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Prep time
10 mins
Total time
10 mins
 
Author: adapted from Cooking Class by Carol Dearth
Ingredients
  • 1 clove garlic
  • 1 small jar (6.5 ounces) marinated artichoke hearts, drained
  • freshly grated zest of 1?2 lemon
  • 1 teaspoon freshly squeezed lemon juice
  • ½ teaspoon dried dill
  • 1 8-ounce package cream cheese, softened
  • salt and pepper to taste
Instructions
Food processor method:
  1. Drop garlic through feed tube with machine running to mince. Add artichoke hearts; pulse-process to chop. Add lemon zest and juice, thyme and cream cheese. Process to blend. Correct seasonings.
By hand:
  1. Mince garlic. Chop artichoke hearts finely. Combine garlic, artichoke hearts, lemon zest and juice, thyme and cream cheese in mixing bowl. Blend well. Correct seasonings.
To serve:
  1. Spoon cheese mixture into two 6-ounce crocks or ramekins, smoothing the tops. Cover tightly and chill. Make ahead and refrigerate up to one week, or freeze for two months.
  2. Let stand at room temperature 10 to 15 minutes before serving to soften. Serve on a tray surrounded with crackers or small toasts, or with a pastry bag, pipe rosettes of the cheese spread onto crackers for a more elegant presentation. Sprinkle with freshly chopped chives.
  3. Makes two crocks, each serving four.
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3.1.09

Categories // The Joy of Cooking Tags // appetizers, artichoke, lemons, recipes, snack

Candied Orange Peel

12.08.2012 by J. Doe // 20 Comments

Every year around this time, I host a holiday cookie exchange. It was one of those things that kind of started on a lark, but then the next year people asked if I was going to host it again, so I did, and then the same thing happened the following year.

One year, I was too busy to do it and actually got phone calls asking if people had missed the evite and/or was everything okay?

It’s all rather gratifying to feel so appreciated.

Then again, you’d have to be a real Scrooge not to appreciate the event. I put all the leaves in my dining table, which groans under the weight of all the cookies. I like to bake, it’s true, but so do many of my friends. There’s not a Toll House in the bunch, and nobody has ever shamed themselves by showing up with a plastic box from Safeway.

Last year, I needed some candied orange peel for some recipe I planned to make – I don’t remember what – and I priced it out at Whole Foods (I know, I know). They wanted an egregious sum of money for orange peel, sugar, and water. But to give them the benefit of the doubt, it does take a bit of time to make candied peel – so that must be what we’re paying them for.

I’ll ignore the fact that the time is mostly spent letting them dry out. It’s the holidays, and I’m feeling generous. Tis the season and all that.

So I made the candied peel and it all disappeared from the cookie exchange table. Every last bit of it.

This year, I sent out my party invite and received several RSVP’s that inquired: Are you making that candied orange peel again?

Well, if something so simple makes my friends happy, then of course.

The recipe below works equally well with grapefruit peel. Probably lemon peel, too, but not with the lemons I bought – their peels were borderline intransigent. And one final note: when you finish cooking the peel in the sugar syrup, don’t throw out the syrup! You can store it and use it for Italian sodas and other things. It has a marvelous, intense orange flavor.

Candied Orange Peel
 
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Prep time
15 mins
Cook time
1 hour
Total time
1 hour 15 mins
 
The peel needs a couple of days to dry out, so you'll need to make these well ahead of time.
Author: Adapted from Bon Appetit, via Epicurious
Ingredients
  • 3 large oranges
  • 4 cups sugar, divided
  • 3 cups water
Instructions
  1. Cut top and bottom off each orange, then cut peel on each orange into 4 vertical segments. Remove each segment (including white pith) in 1 piece. Cut into ¼-inch-wide strips. Cook in large pot of boiling water 15 minutes; drain, rinse, and drain again.
  2. Bring 3 cups sugar and 3 cups water to boil in medium saucepan over medium heat, stirring to dissolve sugar. Add peel. Return to boil. Reduce heat; simmer until peel is very soft, about 45 minutes.
  3. Use a slotted spoon to remove peel from pot; reserve the syrup for another use.
  4. Toss peel and 1 cup sugar on rimmed baking sheet, separating strips. Lift peel from sugar; transfer to racks. Let stand until coating is dry, 1 to 2 days.
Notes
The syrup that is left behind is sweet and infused with intense orange flavor. You can use it for Italian sodas, or to mix into cocktails that call for simple syrup, and probably a hundred other things. Tell me what you use it for, I can't wait for some new ideas.
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3.1.09

 

This is my contribution to Weekend Cooking, hosted by Beth Fish Reads. Why not swing by and see what other sweet surprises await?

 

Categories // The Joy of Cooking Tags // candy, orange, recipes, vegan

Kate Smith’s Coconut Squares

12.04.2012 by J. Doe // Leave a Comment

A while back, I went on a hunt for the original cookbook that the Busy Day Cake appeared in, and when I found it, I purchased several vintage recipe booklets on ebay. I was astonished to discover one called Kate Smith’s Favorite Recipes, which I assume was also produced by the Swansdown Flour Company, as Ms. Smith is pictured gleefully holding up a box of said flour.

A little more poking around, and I learned that Kate Smith lent her name not only to this booklet, but also to several cookbooks, one of which, The Kate Smith Company’s Coming Cookbook, even has the following review on Amazon:

WARNING: THEY ARE NOT DIETETIC; so have NO expectations of figure friendly recipes.

If you are looking for a Kate Smith cookbook on Amazon, chances are good that you already know who she is. If you don’t know,  check out this video of her singing God Bless America.

Great voice, right? But not a figure that suggests you might want her salad recipes.

Anyway, I bought myself a copy of the Favorite Recipes booklet, because I was curious what sort of treats I might find inside. One day, when I wanted a treat but not a trip to the store, I dove into her book and found a recipe for coconut squares, which I made because I happened to have all the needed ingredients on hand.

After mixing it all up, the batter seemed like it needed something, so I chopped up and tossed in two squares of a Ghirardelli semisweet chocolate bar I had. The squares are moist and soft, with lots of coconut flavor and texture contrasting with smooth bits of chocolate. I think the contrasting crunch of macadamia nuts would also be a nice addition; or if you added chocolate and almonds, you’d have an almond joy square.

I had to make two batches, in the end – the first batch mysteriously disappeared and I later learned were consumed quickly by the neighbor children. The Child then requested I make more, because she was going to her friend’s house and wanted to bring some there, too. They whip up in quickly – in about ten minutes, and disappear quickly as well. The speed, as well as all the possibilities for variations on the theme, mean I’m happy to add this recipe to my permanent collection.

Kate Smith's Coconut Squares
 
Print
Prep time
15 mins
Cook time
20 mins
Total time
35 mins
 
Author: Sprung At Last, adapted from Kate Smith's Favorite Recipes
Serves: 12
Ingredients
  • 1 cup sifted cake flour
  • 1 tsp baking powder
  • 6 tbsp butter
  • ½ cup sugar
  • 1 egg
  • 1 tsp vanilla
  • ½ unsweetened shredded coconut
  • 2 squares chopped semisweet chocolate
Instructions
  1. Sift flour and baking powder together; set aside. Cream butter thoroughly; add sugar gradually, and cream together until light and fluffy. Add egg and beat well. Add vanilla and coconut. Add flour gradually, beating well after each addition. Mix in chocolate chunks (or whatever you decide to add, if anything).
  2. Spread into a buttered 13x9 baking dish, and bake 20 minutes in a 350 degree oven. Cool and cut into squares in pan.
Notes
The original recipe says it makes 2 dozen, presumably itty-bitty, squares. I cut a dozen squares, in a size that struck me as reasonable. My point? Your mileage may vary considerably.
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3.1.09

 

Categories // The Joy of Cooking Tags // coconut, cookies, vintage recipes

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